Abstract

Environmental temperature is an important factor exerting pervasive influence on neuronal morphology and synaptic physiology. In the Drosophila brain, axonal arborization of mushroom body Kenyon cells was enhanced when flies were raised at high temperature (30°C rather than 22°C) for several days. Isolated embryonic neurons in culture that lacked cell–cell contacts also displayed a robust temperature-induced neurite outgrowth. This cell-autonomous effect was reflected by significantly increased high-order branching and enlarged growth cones. The temperature-induced morphological alterations were blocked by the Na+ channel blocker tetrodotoxin and a Ca2+ channel mutation but could be mimicked by raising cultures at room temperature with suppressed K+ channel activity. Physiological analyses revealed increased inward Ca2+ currents and decreased outward K+ currents, in conjunction with a distal shift in the site of action potential initiation and increased prevalence of TTX-sensitive spontaneous Ca2+ transients. Importantly, the overgrowth caused by both temperature and hyperexcitability K+ channel mutations were sensitive to genetic perturbations of cAMP metabolism. Thus, temperature acts in a cell-autonomous manner to regulate neuronal excitability and spontaneous activity. Presumably, activity-dependent Ca2+ accumulation triggers the cAMP cascade to confer the activity-dependent plasticity of neuronal excitability and growth.

Cell-autonomous effects of environmental temperature on neuronal development can be readily addressed through a combination of cell culture and in vivo analyses. By using the GAL4-UAS system (Brand and Perrimon, 1993), we demonstrate that high temperature induces overgrowth of mushroom body (MB) nerve terminals in the CNS, similar to the response seen at the peripheral neuromuscular junction (Zhong and Wu, 2004). A robust overgrowth was also observed in isolated neurons in embryonic cultures, including those from the MB lineage. In this study, we investigated the roles of ion channels, neuronal excitability, Ca2+ regulation, and signal transduction pathways in temperature-dependent plasticity of neuronal growth.

Confocal microscopy and analysis of terminal arborization of adult MBs.

For testing the effects of high temperature, flies were raised at 30°C 1 d after eclosion, and control flies were raised at room temperature (RT; 22–23°C) throughout development. The fly brains of identified ages were removed in PBS, fixed in PBS containing 3.7% formaldehyde for 20 min, and subsequently rinsed with PBST (0.1% Triton X-100 in PBS) three times. The samples were further cleaned with the Focus Clear agent for 5 min and mounted with Mount Clear agent (both from Cedarlane Laboratories, Burlington, Ontario, Canada). A stack of MB images in 2 μm sections were taken with a 63× objective lens [numerical aperture (N.A.) 1.3] and a confocal microscope (model 1024; Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA). Three projections of Kenyon cells give rise to five axon lobes of the MB (α, α′, β, β′, and γ), and only subsets of neurons in α, β, and γ lobes are labeled with the 201Y-Gal4 driver (O'Dell et al., 1995; Yang et al., 1995; Ito et al., 1997). To quantify the extent of the terminal arborization, we determined the ratio of the axonal terminal field diameter (TD) and the axonal bundle diameter (BD) for both α and β lobes. TDs were obtained from the average of the brightest and clearest three sections, usually occurring in the middle of the stack. BDs were taken from the average of three different positions along the bundle. All the measurements were done by using the LaserSharp software (Bio-Rad).

Single embryo “giant” neuron cultures.

The giant neuron culture system has been described previously (Wu et al., 1990). Briefly, the interior of a gastrula was extracted with a glass micropipette and dispersed into a drop of culture medium on an uncoated coverslip. The culture medium contained 80% Drosophila Schneider medium and 20% fetal bovine serum (both from Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA), with the addition of 200 ng/ml insulin, 50 μg/ml streptomycin, and 50 U/ml penicillin (all from Sigma, St. Louis, MO). To generate multinucleated giant neurons from neuroblasts, cytochalasin B (CCB; 2 μg/ml; Sigma) was added at the time of plating to arrest cytokinesis (Wu et al., 1990). CCB was subsequently removed by washing with CCB-free medium 1 d after plating. The disruptions of actin filaments were restored within 1 d after CCB washout, as indicated by regular phalloidin staining patterns in filopodia and lamellipodia (Berke et al., 2006). Giant neurons obtained by inhibiting neuroblast divisions display morphological and biochemical markers that would be expressed by their daughter cells because determination of such lineage-specific traits occurs before neuroblast divisions (Salvaterra et al., 1987; Wu et al., 1990; Saito and Wu, 1991; Berke and Wu, 2002). This is important because the Drosophila MB is derived from four embryonic neuroblasts that divide throughout the larval and pupal stages to produce the structure of the adult MB (Ito and Hotta, 1992; Lee et al., 1999). For testing the effects of high temperature, neurons were cultured at RT on the first day with CCB, and they either stayed at RT or were moved to a 30°C incubator after CCB washout. In drug pretreatment experiments, neurons were grown in CCB-containing medium for the first day and then in drug-containing but CCB-free medium from the second day onward [10 nm tetrodotoxin (TTX; Sankyo, Tokyo, Japan), 1 mm 4-aminopyridine (4-AP; Sigma), or 1 mm 8-Br-cAMPs (Calbiochem, La Jolla, CA)]. All cultures were grown in a humidified chamber.

Phase-contrast and fluorescent microscopy of cultured neurons.

Cultured giant neurons were observed with a 100× objective lens (N.A. 1.3) on an inverted microscope (DM IRBE; Leica, Wetzlar, Germany). Phase and fluorescent images were captured by a high-sensitivity digital camera (C4742-95; Hamamatsu Photonics, Shizuoka Pref, Japan). In this study, the growth cone was defined as an enlarged terminal containing a lamellipodial structure. Growth cone area measurements include the relatively thick central domain but exclude the filopodia. Each growth cone was measured with NIH ImageJ software. The neurite terminals were classified into four types (T1–T4) based on their apparent complexity: T1 terminals are the simplest, without major branches and with only a few filopodia; T2 terminals have a single bifurcation; T3 terminals display either tertiary branching or multiple (n ≥ 2) secondary branches; and T4 terminals, the most complex type, exhibit high-order branching usually decorated with a great number of filopodia. The arborization index used to quantify neurite terminal complexity for cultures of each genotype is defined as follows: [(number of T1 terminals × 1) + (number of T2 terminals × 2) + (number of T3 terminals × 3) + (number of T4 terminals × 4)]/total number of terminals. In sampling terminals, each monopolar and bipolar cell contributes to one and two counts, respectively. For multipolar cells, the three more complex branches were sampled.

Ca2+ imaging.

The protocols for ratiometric imaging of intracellular Ca2+ with fura-2 have been described in detail previously (Berke and Wu, 2002; Berke et al., 2006). Briefly, cells were bathed in loading medium containing 4–6 μm fura-2-AM and 10–15 μl/ml pluronic acid in the dark at RT for 1.5–3 h. Bath saline contained (in mm) 128 NaCl, 2 KCl, 4 MgCl2, 1.8 CaCl2, and 35.5 sucrose and was buffered at pH 7.1–7.2 with 5 HEPES (adjusted with NaOH). The 4 mm K+ saline was identical but contained 4 mm KCl and 126 mm NaCl. Imaging was performed with an intensified CCD camera and a shutter/filter wheel controlled by the Ion Wizard software (Ion Optix, Milton, MA). The estimated KD was 147 nm, obtained with a 100× objective, using a cell-free calibration (Williams et al., 1985; Berke et al., 2006). The Ca2+ level was quantified by applying the Grynkiewicz formula (Grynkiewicz et al., 1985) to fura-2 fluorescence recorded from 16 μm2 zones. Running averages of [Ca2+] were performed before analysis using a window of five points. Images were collected with either a 20× (0.75 N.A.) objective or a 100× (1.3 N.A.) oil-immersion objective at 1 Hz. Fluctuations in fura-2 fluorescence were defined as spontaneous Ca2+ transients if they were greater than twice the noise level of baseline fluorescence (∼3 nm peak to peak when measured with the 100× objective). Superfusion was continuous and the rate of perfusion was variable between 0.45 and 1.29 ml/min for the chamber volume of ∼0.15 ml.

Electrophysiology.

Whole-cell patch recordings from giant neurons in culture have been described previously (Saito and Wu, 1991; Zhao et al., 1995; Zhao and Wu, 1997; Yao and Wu, 1999; Peng and Wu, 2007a,b). Recording electrodes were pulled from glass capillaries to obtain a tip opening of ∼1 μm and 3–5 MΩ input resistance in the bath. Normal pipette solution contained (in mm) 144 KCl, 1 MgCl2, 0.5 CaCl2, and 5 EGTA and was buffered at pH 7.1 with 10 HEPES. The bath solution was the same as for Ca2+ imaging. A patch-clamp amplifier (Axopatch 1B; Molecular Devices, Palo Alto, CA) and a computer in conjunction with an analog-to-digital (A/D)–D/A converter and pClamp software (version 5.5.1; Molecular Devices) were used to generate the current- and voltage-clamp commands and for data acquisition. For better isolation of Ca2+ currents, Ba2+ (20 mm) as well as Na+ and K+ channel blockers (10 nm TTX, 1 mm 4-AP, 2.5 mm TEA, and 0.05 mm quinidine) were added to the bath saline, and K+ in the pipette solution was replaced by Cs+ (Peng and Wu, 2007b). Voltage-activated K+ currents were measured in the presence of Na+ and Ca2+ channel blockers in the bath (10 nm TTX and 0.2 mm Cd2+). Transient IA and sustained IK were determined with a 500 ms preconditioning pulse (to −20 mV from a holding potential of −80 mV), followed by a +60 mV test pulse 5 ms afterward (Zhao and Wu, 1997; Peng and Wu, 2007a).

Results

We first investigated how development at an increased temperature alters neuronal morphology within the Drosophila CNS. We used the GAL4-UAS system to visualize a subpopulation of MB Kenyon cells within the adult brain. By expressing a membrane-bound form of GFP (mCD8-GFP) with the 201Y-GAL4 driver (Yang et al., 1995), the pattern of mCD8-GFP fluorescence revealed individual lobes (α, β, and γ) consisting of axon branches of Kenyon cells. This expression pattern was confirmed by immunostaining against the adhesion molecule fasciculin II (data not shown), which expresses intensely in the MB (Crittenden et al., 1998). With the aid of GFP fluorescence, we found that exposure to the high temperature (30°C) from days 2–7 after eclosion caused a striking increase in the diameter of Kenyon cell axon terminals (quantified as TD) compared with RT (22°C) controls. This was true for both the α and β lobes of male (Fig. 1A) and female flies (data not shown). However, there was no significant change in the diameter of axon bundles (BD). The ratio of the two diameters (TD/BD) demonstrated the degree of terminal field expansion at high temperature (Fig. 1B). These parameters, TD, BD, and TD/BD, did not change when control flies were reared at RT throughout the 7 d (data not shown). Therefore, our data suggest that the temperature experienced by the flies during early adulthood promotes the growth of MB Kenyon cell presynaptic terminal arbors.

Enhanced neuronal growth in vivo and in culture by an increase in environmental temperature. A, Confocal stack images of MB structures from 7-d-old WT male flies. Sibling flies were collected 1 d after eclosion and raised at RT (22–23°C) or 30°C for another 6 d. The GFP-labeled fluorescence was driven by the 201Y-Gal4 line. The left and right hemispheres are from different animals. MB lobes of α, β, and γ are marked as indicated. The terminal structures of the α lobes in the boxed area are enlarged four times in the inset. Note the increased terminal field arborization in 30°C-treated flies. Scale bar, 50 μm. B, The extent of terminal arborization is indicated by the TD/BD ratio. The sample sizes are indicated in the parentheses. C, Phase and fluorescent images of neurons labeled by 201Y-driven GFP expression cultured at RT and 30°C. Scale bar, 25 μm. D, 201Y-labeled neurons displayed increased growth cone size and neurite terminal complexity (arborization index; see Materials and Methods) after an exposure to 30°C for 2 d. *p < 0.05, t test. Numbers in parentheses indicate cell numbers. Error bars indicate SEM. GC, Growth cone.

To examine how neuronal morphology changes in response to high temperature independent of cell–cell interactions, we used the well characterized giant neuron culture system derived from Drosophila embryonic neuroblasts (see Materials and Methods). In cultures made from single embryos, the 201Y-GAL4 line labels a discrete and relatively small population of neurons (Berke and Wu, 2002; Peng and Wu, 2007a). High-magnification images highlighted a pronounced increase in neurite terminal branching after exposure to high temperature for 2 d (Fig. 1C,D). An arborization index based on the weighted average of individual arbor types (see Materials and Methods and Figs. 2 and 3) provided a quantitative measure of arborization complexity. Notably, high temperature induced excessive neurite projections directly from the soma, although there was no obvious effect on the size of the cell body (Fig. 1C). Interestingly, the neuronal growth cone, known for sensing target cells during synapse formation, became ∼50% larger in 201Y-positive cells when cultures were exposed to 30°C for 2 d (Fig. 1C,D). Therefore, high temperature induced an overgrowth of nerve terminals both in vivo and in culture, although the cells were grown under different environments and observed at different developmental stages.

Examples of the temperature-induced increase in growth cone size and terminal arborization. Phase images of giant neurons cultured at different temperatures are shown. A, B, Cultures were initially grown at RT for 1 d and another 2 d at either RT (A) or 30°C (B). Insets show the growth cones enlarged 1.5 times. In the right panels, hand-drawn examples of monopolar, bipolar, and multipolar cells demonstrate enlarged growth cones and highly ramified neurites after a 2 d exposure to 30°C. C, Hand-drawn examples of neurite terminals from different neurons. The terminals were classified into four types based on geometric complexity: T4 > T3 > T2 > T1 (see Materials and Methods). Scale bars, 20 μm.

Giant neuron cultures consist of heterogeneous cell populations differentiated from different neuroblast lineages (see Materials and Methods), and, in fact, temperature-induced morphological changes were common to a variety of these neuronal types. A majority of cells grown at 30°C displayed more complex arborization accompanied by enlarged growth cones (Fig. 2A,B). Representative nerve terminal arbors of individual categories are depicted in Figure 2C, with the population distribution among the corresponding categories provided in Figure 3A. Development at high temperature had a strong effect on arborization among all neuronal types, including monopolar, bipolar, and multipolar cells (Fig. 3B). Importantly, exposure to 30°C for only 1 d [i.e., 2 d in vitro (DIV); see Materials and Methods] was sufficient to enhance arborization in these growing cells, with the effect plateauing by 3 DIV (Fig. 3C). The excessive branching was also characterized by an increase in the total length of the arbor per primary neurite and the average arbor length per internode segment (data not shown). A strong influence of temperature on growth cone morphology was also indicated by a higher percentage of monopolar, bipolar, and multipolar cells displaying large, expanded growth cones (Figs. 2A,B, 3D,E). The enlarged growth cones became evident after 1 d at high temperature (i.e., 2 DIV), reaching a maximum after 3 DIV, and paralleled the time course of increased arborization complexity (Fig. 3C,F). It is not known why terminal overbranching and growth cone enlargement do not increase further after 3 DIV and whether additional growth may be induced if high temperature is experienced beyond 6 DIV.

We examined intracellular cytoskeleton organization by using the Gal4-UAS expression system after high-temperature treatment. As shown previously in Drosophila neuronal cultures and in other preparations, the established terminal branches contain both actin and microtubule cytoskeletons, whereas the mobile filopodia and flattened lamellipodia edges are supported by actin filaments only. Microtubule assembly, indicated by the GFP signal of α-tubulin (elavC155-Gal4/+; UAS-GFP-α-tub/+; see Materials and Methods) was seen in the central domain of growth cones but was also profusely expressed in the complex arbor of neurons grown at 30°C (Fig. 4A). Actin filaments, visualized by the GFP signal of the filamentous actin-binding protein GMA (elavC155-Gal4/UAS-GMA; see Materials and Methods), were observed in the edge of growth cones and in filopodia, in particular in the profuse filopodial decorations along neurites and growth cones grown at 30°C (Fig. 4B). However, actin but not tubulin was present within some of the higher-order fine branches of complex arbors, indicating their filopodial identity. Similar conclusions have been reached using a tubulin antibody and phalloidin to label the microtubule and actin cytoskeletons, respectively (data not shown).

Cytoskeletal structures of the neurite terminals. A, Phase and fluorescent images of neurite terminals in cultured neurons expressing GFP-tagged α-tubulin (GFP-α-tub) driven by pan-neural elavC155-GAL4. The difference of the contours between phase and fluorescent images demonstrate that microtubules do not invade the peripheral area of expanded lamellipodia and high-order branches (fine protrusions) induced by high temperature. B, Patterns of actin filaments revealed by GFP-tagged actin-binding domain of moesin (GMA) construct. In contrast, actin filaments are enriched in the lamellipodia and filopodia of the growth cone and fine high-order branches. Scale bar, 20 μm.

Increased spontaneous Ca2+ dynamics in cultures developed at high temperature. A, A series of pseudocolor images of fura-2-loaded neurons in a 30°C-treated culture collected at indicated time points. The pseudocolor scale bar indicates estimated intracellular Ca2+ levels based on ratiometric fluorescence measurements. Scale bar, 25 μm. B, The Ca2+ dynamics of the boxed areas in several cells (C1–C4) in A is quantified before, during, and after a 2 min exposure to 4 mm K+ saline (4 K). GC, Growth cone; S, soma. Spontaneous activity was observed in cells C1 and C3 before the 4 mm K+ stimulus. Note the consistently larger spontaneous events in the growth cone than in the soma and the 4 K-induced robust Ca2+ dynamics in cell C2. The vertical bar indicates 5 nm. C, The percentage of neurons with spontaneous transients (filled portion) and the percentage of quiescent neurons that became active after perfusion of 4 mm K+ (4 K; open portion). Cultures grown at 30°C tended to have a greater percentage of cells with spontaneous or 4 K-sensitive activities than cultures grown at RT. n = 69 for RT and 74 for 30°C.

Using whole-cell patch-clamp recording, we found evidence that high temperature increased neurite excitability and modified ion current expression. In RT cultures, ∼45% of neurons displayed all-or-none action potentials (cf. Peng and Wu, 2007a), with regular trains of full-blown, overshooting spikes as recorded from the soma during injection of depolarizing current (Fig. 6A) (cf. Zhao and Wu, 1997; Yao and Wu, 1999). In contrast, cultures grown at 30°C had a higher percentage of spiking neurons [RT, 45% (n = 158); 30°C, 63% (n = 48); p < 0.05, χ2 test]. These spiking cells, often equipped with enlarged growth cones and complex terminal arbors, tended to display broadened but nonovershooting action potentials (Fig. 6A–C). During progressively increasing levels of step current injection, most neurons raised at 30°C exhibited such spike activities riding on top of varying levels of passive depolarization (data not shown). In contrast, the peak of the overshooting, full-blown action potentials in RT control cells was limited by a reversal potential although the baseline of passive depolarization increased after greater current injection (data not shown). In addition, temperature increased the population of cells with a prolonged delay in spike initiation [onset time, >100 ms; RT, 25%, (n = 71); 30°C, 70% (n = 30); p < 0.001]. More importantly, some of the nonovershooting spiking events in temperature-treated cultures appeared as doublets or triplets (RT, 0%; 30°C, 17%; p < 0.01) (Fig. 6A), indicating multiple spike initiation sites. These observations support the idea that full-blown local soma action potentials were replaced by signals propagating from remote initiation sites in the neurites, suggesting that high temperature enhances excitability in the well extended distal arbors. Another striking feature of the unusual regenerative potentials in 30°C-treated cultures was represented by irregular plateau potentials that showed a prolonged depolarization and failed to repolarize during current injection. Such cells were rarely seen in cultures grown at RT (RT, 1%; 30°C, 13%; p < 0.05) (Fig. 6A). These plateau potentials did have a clear reversal potential (data not shown) and may be an extreme case of spike broadening (Fig. 6A,C).

Given the altered spike activities, we investigated whether development at high temperature induced an altered composition of the underlying ion currents. Several types of currents were examined using ion substitution and pharmacological blockers during voltage-clamp recording. We first isolated the currents flowing through Ca2+ channels by adding K+ and Na+ channel blockers. Measurements of inward currents mediated by Ca2+ channels were further facilitated by using Ba2+ (20 mm) in the bath as the charger carrier (see Materials and Methods). Inward currents peaked approximately at 0 mV (Fig. 6D,E) (cf. Peng and Wu, 2007b). Strikingly, both the transient and sustained components of Ca2+ channel-mediated currents were upregulated in cultures grown at 30°C (Fig. 6F).

We also measured voltage-activated outward K+ currents (transient IA and sustained IK, isolated with prepulse voltage-clamp protocols) when inward Na+ and Ca2+ channels as well as outward Ca2+-activaterd K+ channels were blocked (see Materials and Methods). Interestingly, in contrast to Ca2+ current upregulation, both IA and IK were downregulated in 30°C-treated cultures (Fig. 6G), presumably contributing to the observed membrane hyperexcitability. The increase in Ca2+ current density may explain the lengthening of action potentials and generation of plateau action potentials recorded at the soma during current injection. This effect may be further enhanced by weakened repolarization attributable to decreased K+ currents (Fig. 6A,C). Our data therefore establish a correlation between the physiological and morphological alterations observed in isolated, growing neurons in response to an increase in environmental temperature.

Genetic and pharmacological analyses confirm the roles of hyperexcitability and Ca2+ influx in temperature-dependent developmental plasticity

We obtained additional lines of evidence to support a role for membrane hyperexcitability in high temperature-induced overgrowth by using drugs and mutants. In parallel to its suppressing effect on spontaneous Ca2+ dynamics described above, chronic application of TTX suppressed the morphological changes observed in temperature-treated WT cultures (Fig. 7). Furthermore, hyperexcitability attributable to eag and Sh K+ channel mutations led to enhanced terminal arborization and enlarged the neuronal growth cones, even at RT (Fig. 7) (cf. Berke et al., 2006). These growth phenotypes could be mimicked by chronic application of 4-AP (IA blocker) to WT cultures. Moreover, the hyperexcitability-induced growth in Sh neurons was suppressed by TTX (Fig. 7B,C).

Because neuronal activity facilitates Ca2+ influx through voltage-gated Ca2+ channels to influence intracellular Ca2+ dynamics, we examined the effects of a Ca2+channel mutation, cac, that greatly reduces Ca2+ currents in cultured giant neurons (Peng and Wu, 2007b) and depolarization-induced Ca2+ transients (data not shown). The cac mutation by itself did not alter growth cone sizes and arborization indices but blocked the ability of high temperature to increase these morphological indicators (Fig. 7B,C). The results suggest a role for Cac channels in mediating Ca2+ influx during temperature-dependent neuronal growth.

In vivo roles of hyperexcitability and cAMP signaling in MB development

The conclusions derived from mutant cultures (Fig. 7) were also applicable to MB Kenyon cell growth in vivo. With the same 201Y-GAL4 driver and UAS-mCD8-GFP responder (compare Fig. 1), we visualized MB arbors in different hyperexcitable mutant backgrounds. In eag, Sh, or eag Sh mutant animals raised at RT, the terminal arbors of both α and β lobes were expanded, similar to, or even larger than, the expansion produced by development at 30°C in WT adults (Fig. 8A,B, TD/BD). Notably, eag Sh double-mutant flies did not produce significantly greater terminal expansion than either single mutant alone.

Mutational analyses of MB Kenyon cell growth at RT in vivo. A, MBs from 7-d-old male flies raised at RT in different genetic backgrounds that expressed UAS-CD8-GFP driven by 201Y-GAL4 (see Fig. 1 for details). Scale bar, 50 μm. B, The TD/BD ratios indicate that all K+ channel (eag, Sh, and eag Sh) and dnc mutations, but not rut, resulted in an increase of terminal arborization in both α and β lobes. The sample sizes are indicated in the parentheses. *p < 0.05, one-way ANOVA. Error bars indicate SEM.

Our culture data indicate an important role for depolarization-induced Ca2+ influx, which is known to trigger several second-messenger pathways, including the cAMP cascade. cAMP signaling regulates activity-dependent neuronal plasticity, including the modulation of motoneuron growth by temperature and K+ channel mutations (Zhong et al., 1992; Zhong and Wu, 1993; Renger et al., 2000). With the dnc and rut mutations, which affect a cAMP-dependent PDE and a Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent AC (Byers et al., 1981; Livingstone et al., 1984; Tully and Quinn, 1985), we found that cAMP also regulates temperature-dependent neuronal growth within the CNS. Kenyon cell arbors in rut2 flies were not different from those of WT control, whereas dnc1 increased terminal arborization (Fig. 8A,B).

cAMP signaling in cell-autonomous regulation of neuronal growth was investigated in giant neuron cultures. The effects of hyperexcitability induced by high temperature, K+ channel mutations, or pharmacological blockers were studied in a rut mutant background. The most striking rut effect was the suppression of overgrowth caused by hyperexcitability. Both growth cone size and arborization index were no longer different from WT controls in rut1 ShM double-mutant cultures or in 4-AP-treated rut cultures (Fig. 9B,C). Mutations of rut also suppressed some aspects of temperature-induced neuronal growth. We observed in rut1 but not rut2 cultures a small increase in growth cone size and arborization index (Fig. 9B,C). However, rut1 neurons did not display the increase in arborization index when grown at high temperature (Fig. 9C). Notably, neither allele of rut prevented the growth cone enlargement after high temperature treatment (Fig. 9B). These observations indicate that the signaling processes that may be downstream of Ca2+ in temperature-induced growth may not be identical with respect to growth cone expansion and neurite branching.

To establish an independent line of evidence in support of the critical role of the Rut AC, a rescue experiment was performed by expressing UAS-rut+ (Liu et al., 2006) using the 201Y-Gal4 driver in a rut mutant background. Giant neuron cultures prepared from rut1/rut1; 201Y-Gal4, UAS-GFP/UAS-rut+ embryos were subjected to high-temperature treatment. Among 201Y-positive neurons, targeted expression of UAS-Rut+ reverted the suppression effect of the rut1 mutation on the temperature-induced terminal overbranching (Fig. 10). This observation further delineates the role of the Rut adenylyl cyclase in different aspects of temperature-induced neuronal growth (i.e., terminal arborization vs growth cone expansion).

Discussion

This study presents a common theme by which temperature promotes nerve terminal outgrowth for neurons in both the central and peripheral nervous systems, as well as for cultured neurons devoid of cell–cell contacts. Direct monitoring by optical imaging and electrophysiological recording from cultured neurons corroborated the genetic and pharmacological evidence that high temperature enhances membrane excitability levels through ion channel regulation and that the interplay of K+ and Ca2+ channels leads to increased cytosolic Ca2+ levels. Activation of the Ca2+-dependent Rut AC in turn triggers the cAMP-dependent pathway to regulate this striking developmental plasticity (Fig. 11).

Summary of temperature-induced cellular events that mediate neuronal overgrowth. An increase in environmental temperature modulates several ion currents to increase membrane excitability. The interplay of K+ and Ca2+ currents leads to increased cytosolic Ca2+ levels, resulting in activation of the Ca2+-dependent Rut AC, which in turn triggers cAMP-dependent pathways to regulate the striking nerve terminal overgrowth. However, other molecular mechanisms are likely to also participate. PKA, Protein kinase A.

Environmental temperature and axonal terminal outgrowth in vivo

Quantitative measurements of the larval neuromuscular junction have demonstrated that high temperature promotes the growth of peripheral nerve branches and synapses (Sigrist et al., 2003; Zhong and Wu, 2004). The current study extends this observation to the MB (Figs. 1, 8), a developmentally well characterized CNS structure (Ito et al., 1997; Lee et al., 1999) important for learning and memory (Heisenberg, 1998). Whereas postsynaptic expression of muscle glutamate receptors has been implicated in the temperature-dependent synaptic overgrowth at larval neuromuscular junctions (Sigrist et al., 2003), presynaptic nerve excitability also plays a definitive role, as indicated by the suppression of such overgrowth by Na+ channel mutations (Sigrist et al., 2003; Zhong and Wu, 2004). It is known that Na+ channels express in neurons but not muscle cells, which rely on Ca2+ channels for depolarization (Singh and Wu, 1999). Our study on dissociated cultures confirms that enhanced membrane excitability is responsible for the temperature-dependent growth of single neurons, even without interactions between presynaptic and postsynaptic elements.

Interplay of K+ and Ca2+ channels regulating developmental plasticity induced by high temperature

Our results from cultured neurons indicate that the modulation of K+ and Ca2+ channels by high temperature increases membrane excitability, leading to enhanced Ca2+ dynamics especially within the growth cone and eventually to neurite outgrowth. First, there was a striking parallel in nerve terminal overgrowth between cultures of hyperexcitable K+ channel mutants (eag, Sh, and eag Sh) at RT and WT cultures grown at high temperature (Figs. 2, 7). Such terminal overgrowth could also be mimicked in WT cultures by pharmacological blockade of K+ currents (Fig. 7). Third, direct imaging revealed frequent spontaneous Ca2+ transients in WT cultures grown at high temperature and in K+ channel mutant cultures at RT (Fig. 5). Fourth, when neuronal excitability was reduced by blocking Na+ channels with TTX, the spontaneous Ca2+ transients, enlarged growth cones, and high-order terminal arbors induced by either high-temperature treatment or K+ channel mutations disappeared (Figs. 5, 7). Finally, whole-cell recording of neurons reared at 30°C revealed an upregulation of Ca2+ currents, a downregulation of K+ currents, and an increased population of neurons capable of firing all-or-none spikes or plateau potentials (Fig. 6) (see Results).

A higher excitability level in distal neurites and growth cones was reflected by the greater size of spontaneous Ca2+ transients in these distal regions, which occurred more frequently in 30°C-treated WT cultures (Fig. 5). Electrophysiological recording indicated a distal shift of the spike initiation site away from the soma, and a prevalence of doublets or triplets of spike activities (instead of single spikes) presumably reflects multiple action potential initiation sites in the complex arbors (Fig. 6). These excitability patterns have been described in the soma of neurons in semiintact preparations of Drosophila (Choi et al., 2004) and other invertebrates (Burrows, 1996) that display complex branching patterns. Therefore, these effects are not abnormal but, rather, may be a natural outcome of neuronal maturation.

It has been proposed that the accumulation of intracellular Ca2+ beyond a set point no longer promotes neuronal growth (Cohan et al., 1987). It is known that double-mutant eag Sh larvae display more extreme neuronal hyperexcitability than either single mutant at neuromuscular junctions (Wu et al., 1983; Gho and Ganetzky, 1992). Our results indicate that in both the adult CNS and embryonic cultures, eag and Sh mutants displayed terminal overgrowth at RT (22–23°C), but such growth was not further enhanced in eag Sh double mutants (Figs. 7, 8). Moreover, the extent of terminal overgrowth of these K+ channel mutants was not further enhanced when grown at high temperature (Fig. 7). However, neuronal overgrowth at the larval neuromuscular junction is induced by a milder temperature increase and could be observed at 25°C in eag or Sh single mutants and at 18–21°C in double mutants (Zhong et al., 1992; Zhong and Wu, 2004).

The processes controlling growth cone development and motility determine neurite elongation and branching. Previous studies in cultured Drosophila neurons have demonstrated the involvement of cAMP in growth cone motility and Ca2+ regulation (Kim and Wu, 1996; Berke and Wu, 2002), possibly involving ion channel modulation, as has been shown for muscle and nerve K+ channels (Zhong and Wu, 1993; Zhao and Wu, 1995). Growth cone morphology and neurite branching in culture were both affected by high-temperature and K+ channel perturbations (Fig. 7). However, cAMP-dependent regulation appears to differentially mediate the effects of high temperature and hyperexcitability on growth cone size. In contrast to the case of branch overgrowth, rut mutations suppressed only K+ channel- but not high temperature-induced growth cone expansion (Figs. 9, 10).

Downstream effectors of the cAMP pathway have been implicated in mediating synaptic growth to affect behavior such as learning. A downstream target of cAMP-dependent protein kinase, the transcription factor CREB (cAMP response element-binding protein) modulates activity-dependent synaptic growth in Drosophila (Davis et al., 1996) and Aplysia (Bailey and Kandel, 1993). Altered expression of the Fas II adhesion molecule is also required for synaptic overgrowth induced by eag, Sh, or dnc mutants (Schuster et al., 1996), suggesting that modulation of cellular adhesion may be an important mediator of temperature-dependent growth.

Other signal transduction pathways may also contribute to growth cone development and its regulation by high temperature. It is known that mutations of the CaMKII and cGMP-dependent protein kinase (PKG) pathways can severely modify axon terminal branching at the neuromuscular junction (Wang et al., 1994; Renger et al., 1999). Cultured neurons carrying variants of the PKG locus differ in spontaneous action potential activities and voltage-gated K+ currents (Renger et al., 1999). Preliminary analysis in culture suggests that these variants differ with respect to spontaneous Ca2+ dynamics and growth cone morphology (data not shown). It will be interesting to dissect how these different signal transduction pathways act in concert or independently to mediate temperature-dependent neuronal growth.

Footnotes

This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants HD18577 and NS26528. We thank Jihye Lee for advice on confocal microscopy. We also thank Haig Keshishian and Yale University for the use of their confocal microscopy facilities.

Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Chun-Fang Wu, Professor,
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242.chun-fang-wu{at}uiowa.edu